"Say You Will" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by Foreigner | ||||
from the album Inside Information | ||||
B-side | "A Night to Remember" | |||
Released | November 1987 [1] | |||
Genre | Rock | |||
Length | 4:12 (album version) 3:59 (7" single version) 5:24 (12" version) | |||
Label | Atlantic | |||
Songwriter(s) | Mick Jones and Lou Gramm | |||
Producer(s) | Mick Jones and Frank Filipetti | |||
Foreigner singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"Say You Will" on YouTube |
"Say You Will" is a song by British-American rock band Foreigner. It was the first single released from the album Inside Information (1987), and was co-written by Lou Gramm and Mick Jones (See 1987 in music).
The single reached No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 and became their fourth #1 hit on the Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart, holding the top spot for four weeks, starting on December 19, 1987. [2] [3]
"Say You Will" was one of Foreigner's last two Top 10 chart hits in the United States, followed by the 1988 release of the single "I Don't Want to Live Without You" (which reached No. 5 on the Hot 100 chart). The song also became the band's third-highest-charting hit in Germany, where it reached No. 22, faring even better in Switzerland, the Netherlands, and particularly Norway, where it reached No. 4. The video clip for this song, directed by David Fincher, reached No. 1 on MTV's Top Twenty chart in February 1988.
Allmusic noted that the single was a "good example" of the band's "balancing act" as "the guitar-heavy style of their early work gave way to slick arrangements that pushed electronics to the fore...temper(ing) its rock guitar edge...and Lou Gramm's quasi-operatic vocals...by thick layers of chiming synthesizers and an array of electronic textures." [4]
Cash Box called it a "powerful pop/rock number" with "wide demographic appeal." [5]
It is also featured on the band's compilation 40: Forty Hits From Forty Years 1977-2017 published in 2017, in an acoustic version with Kelly Hansen on vocals as a new song.
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Say You Will" | 4:12 | |
2. | "A Night To Remember" | Lou Gramm, Mick Jones | 3:58 |
Total length: | 7:52 |
Chart (1987–88) [6] | Peak position |
---|---|
Canada Top Singles (RPM) [7] | 13 |
Dutch Top 40 | 14 |
German Singles Chart | 22 |
Australian Singles Chart | 6 |
Norwegian Singles Chart | 4 |
Swiss Singles Chart | 20 |
UK Singles Chart [8] | 71 |
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 [2] | 6 |
U.S. Billboard Adult Contemporary [9] | 41 |
U.S. Billboard Album Rock Tracks [3] | 1 |
Chart (1988) | Position |
---|---|
Canada Top Singles (RPM) [10] | 98 |
United States (Billboard) [11] [12] | 73 |
Foreigner is a British-American rock band formed in New York City in 1976 by guitarist Mick Jones, vocalist Lou Gramm, drummer Dennis Elliott, keyboardist Al Greenwood, bassist Ed Gagliardi and multi-instrumentalist Ian McDonald, the last of whom was also a founding member of King Crimson. Foreigner is one of the world's best-selling bands of all time, with worldwide sales of more than 80 million records, including 37.5 million in the US.
Inside Information is the sixth studio album by the British-American rock band Foreigner, released on December 7, 1987. The album debuted at 15, on the Billboard 200 Albums Chart and was certified Platinum in the U.S. for sales exceeding one million copies. Although a huge standard by any country's charting method, the band's sales were certainly plummeting since the release of 4 in 1981. It was the last album to feature the '80s core lineup of Gramm, Jones, Wills, and Elliott.
Louis Andrew Grammatico, known professionally as Lou Gramm, is an American singer. He is best known as co-founder and lead vocalist of the rock band Foreigner from 1976 to 1990 and again from 1992 to 2003, during which time the band had numerous successful albums and singles. In 2024, Gramm was selected as an inductee for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of Foreigner.
"Juke Box Hero" is a song by British-American rock band Foreigner written by Lou Gramm and Mick Jones from their 1981 album 4. It first entered the Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart in July 1981 and eventually reached #3 on that chart. Released as the album's third single in early 1982, it subsequently went to #26 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart
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